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Monday, August 5, 2013

The brief life and death of a sourdough starter

Brian and I went to Vermont recently to visit the King Arthur Flour Company and
came home with a new pet! This creature was a sourdough starter descended from a starter that’s more than 200
years old.

A sourdough starter is actually a living thing that needs to
be fed flour and water and stirred once a week. And in return for this care, it
will reward you with endless loaves of sourdough bread. Just scoop out a little
bit of the starter when you want to bake a loaf, feed the rest regularly, and it will
grow and live for years and years. In fact, Boudin Bakery in San
Francisco says it has been using the same starter since 1849.

So starters can live for hundreds of years, but I managed to
kill mine within two weeks. I went on vacation and forgot to tell my mother to
feed it. Sadness. Death.

A few weeks later, I got a second chance at sourdough. A
chef I was interviewing took pity on my tale of sourdough woe and gave me a portion of
his own starter, which he’d been nurturing and baking from for almost
a year. It even had a name: Lorraine. So he gave me a scoop of Lorraine Junior
(there was an actual a name tag on the jar), and sent her off to what he thought
would be a good home.

And….I forgot to feed it again. Actually, I willfully
ignored it, continually putting off feeding it for days, then weeks, telling
myself that I’d do it later, or tomorrow, until one day I opened up the jar. It sort of hissed angrily, then let out a smell that was scarily reminiscent of paint thinner.